
Man Ray
Photographs, Paintings, Objects
During the first half of this century, Man Ray
(1890-1976) again and again set the international Dada and Surrealist
movements afire with his photographs, paintings, and objects.
A friend of Marcel Duchamp and many other artists, Man
Ray portrayed the creative elite of his time--Salvador Dali,
Picasso, Luis Bunuel, and James Joyce, among them. He founded
modern object art and raised photography to the level at which
it was recognized as being an artistic genre in its own right.
In addition, he was an acute observer of his times and
probably the most influential source of inspiration for the
avant-garde movements of the 1920s and 1930s. Many of his
works the most significant of which are presented in this
book became artistic milestones of an entire epoch. The introductory
essay is by the Italian art scholar and critic, Janus.
1997 / paperback / ISBN 0-393-31624-6 / 47 full-color photographs and duotones / 120 pages /
photography
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